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Playwright vs other automation frameworks

There are a number of options when for frameworks for end-to-end testing. If you’re thinking about using Checkly, you’re likely aware of a few.

Puppeteer vs Playwright

The resemblance to Google’s Puppeteer is striking, and for good reason.

In the words of the authors:

We are the same team that originally built Puppeteer at Google […]. With Playwright, we’d like to take it one step further and offer the same functionality for all the popular rendering engines. We’d like to see Playwright vendor-neutral and shared governed.

In short, Playwright builds on the experience of Puppeteer to provide a way to:

  1. run against all major browsers (Chromium/Chrome, Firefox, WebKit/Safari)
  2. write more concise scripts (e.g. minimising the need for explicit waits)
  3. easily migrate existing codebases (keeping a very similar API)

This is achieved in the form of a compact node library that exposes a high-level API to interact with web pages in a fast, secure, stable and simple way. As it is an open-source project, you can contribute to it yourself.

Playwright vs Cypress

Long the dominant framework for (at the time) modern end-to-end testing, Cypress is still very widely used as a testing framework by front-end focused teams.

Due to architectural differences, Playwright can support multiple languages for writing tests, and run more browsers for testing. Due to Playwright’s status as a free and open source project, users don’t have to deal with new features being paywalled, a significant issue for Cypress users since 2023.

Read more about Playwright vs. Cypress.


Last updated on December 9, 2024. You can contribute to this documentation by editing this page on Github